
Redondo Beach Sunrooms & Patios is a Redondo Beach sunroom contractor specializing in sunroom additions, four season rooms, and patio enclosures for homeowners along the South Bay coast. We have served Redondo Beach since 2020 and understand the local permit process, coastal material requirements, and HOA review steps that shape every project here.

Most Redondo Beach homes were built between the 1950s and 1980s and have compact lots that leave little room for traditional expansions. A sunroom addition gives you real enclosed square footage without the cost and disruption of a full home addition. Learn more about sunroom additions.
Redondo Beach afternoons bring onshore winds and marine layer that can make an open patio uncomfortable for much of the year. Enclosing your existing patio turns a space you avoid into one you use daily, without starting from scratch on a full addition.
Redondo Beach's mild winters and cool marine layer mornings mean a fully conditioned four season room is genuinely usable every month of the year. These rooms connect to your home's heating and cooling system, so temperature swings from June Gloom or a warm Santa Ana wind never close the room down.
For Redondo Beach homeowners who want airflow and ocean breezes without the debris and insects that come with an open patio, a screen room is the right balance. It works particularly well on the ocean-adjacent side of a home where breezes are consistent and welcome.
Many Redondo Beach homes have an existing covered patio that sits underused because it still feels too exposed. Converting that structure into a fully enclosed sunroom is usually less expensive than a ground-up addition and makes use of a foundation that is already in place.
An all season room is a popular choice in Redondo Beach for homeowners who want the light and openness of a sunroom with the comfort of a conditioned interior space. The result is a room that handles coastal humidity, salt air, and seasonal temperature shifts without losing its appeal.
Redondo Beach is a fully built-out coastal city, which means nearly every home here is an older one - most were constructed between the 1950s and 1980s. Small lots, compact yards, and city setback rules limit where additions can go, and the coastal location means standard inland materials do not hold up the same way. Salt air accelerates corrosion on metal fasteners, frames, and window seals. A sunroom built with materials not rated for a coastal environment will show rust, failing seals, and drafts within a few years - long before an equivalent room built a few miles inland would show the same problems.
The city permit process at the Redondo Beach Building and Safety Division adds another layer of local knowledge that matters. Plan check timelines run three to six weeks before construction can begin, and the city conducts inspections at multiple stages - not just at the end. Many neighborhoods, particularly in North Redondo and along the Hollywood Riviera border, also fall under HOA rules that require architectural review before a permit application is even submitted. A contractor who is not familiar with this sequence will either underestimate your timeline or, worse, skip steps that create legal problems later.
Our crew works throughout Redondo Beach regularly, pulling permits from the Building and Safety Division on Camino Real and coordinating HOA architectural reviews for projects in communities across North and South Redondo. We know that the ocean-facing side of a home near the Esplanade takes more material wear than a home up in the inland streets, and we spec accordingly from the first proposal.
Redondo Beach is divided into distinct parts, and those differences matter for sunroom work. South Redondo - the neighborhoods near the Pier, Riviera Village, and the coastal strip - tends to have single-family homes on compact lots where setback rules constrain design options. North Redondo has a heavier mix of condos, townhomes, and condo associations, which means HOA review is more common and often more detailed. We handle both sides of the city regularly, and we ask the right questions about your specific situation at the very first visit.
We also work in neighboring Hermosa Beach and Torrance, so if you have family or neighbors in those cities looking for a sunroom contractor, we serve them too.
We respond to all inquiries within 1 business day and schedule an in-person visit to your Redondo Beach home. This conversation covers the space, your goals, and a realistic sense of what is buildable on your lot given city setback rules.
After the site visit, we put together a detailed proposal with a full cost breakdown. We include materials, timeline, and the permit and HOA steps specific to your address - so there are no surprises about cost or timeline once you sign.
We submit your permit to the City of Redondo Beach and handle any HOA architectural review documents on your behalf. Plan check typically runs three to six weeks. We keep you updated throughout and order materials during the wait.
Once permits are in hand, construction begins with foundation or slab work, then framing, glass, and interior finishing. A city inspector signs off before the project is complete. We do a final walkthrough with you and leave you copies of all permit and inspection records.
We serve all of Redondo Beach - from the streets near the Pier to the neighborhoods up in North Redondo. Reach out today for a free in-person estimate. We respond within 1 business day.
(424) 999-1971Redondo Beach is a coastal city of roughly 67,000 residents in the South Bay area of Los Angeles County, split into distinct neighborhoods that feel meaningfully different from each other. South Redondo - the area closest to the water, anchored by the Redondo Beach Pier and the Esplanade - is predominantly single-family homes with higher property values and direct exposure to the marine environment. Riviera Village, a walkable shopping and dining district in South Redondo, marks the center of that neighborhood's community life. North Redondo is denser, with a heavier mix of condos, townhomes, and multi-unit buildings, many of them built in the 1970s and governed by homeowners associations.
The housing stock across most of Redondo Beach dates from the postwar decades - roughly the late 1940s through the early 1980s - which means older construction standards, smaller lots, and homes that have been updated in pieces rather than comprehensively. Stucco exteriors and compact backyard spaces are the norm. The city's coastal location creates a genuine outdoor living culture: residents use their patios, yards, and decks more months of the year than in most other parts of the country. That same coastal position, however, means the marine layer rolls in most mornings - a stretch locals call June Gloom runs from May through early July - and afternoon onshore winds are a consistent feature rather than an exception. Neighboring cities Hermosa Beach to the north and Torrance to the east share many of the same housing and climate conditions, so sunroom projects across this part of the South Bay tend to call for the same coastal-grade material choices.
Glass solarium installations that flood your home with natural light.
Learn MoreWhether you are in South Redondo near the Pier or up in North Redondo, we come to your home, look at your space, and give you a written estimate at no charge. Call us or send a message to get started.